Kid Creole and the Coconuts

Kid Creole and the Coconuts News

Jun
10
2011

New Album Coming September 13th!

Kid Creole & The Coconuts- I Wake Up Screaming (Sept. 13th on Strut Records)

I Wake Up Screaming Features Collaborations w/ Andy Butler of Hercules & Love Affair

Kid Creole and the Coconuts "I Wake Up Screaming"

 

The Tropical Gangster is back. August Darnell a.k.a. Kid Creole returns with his first studio album in over 10 years this Fall, I Wake Up Screaming, an epic new Creolian odyssey recorded for Strut at Darnell's Sweden HQ. With cover artwork echoing his love of 1940s film noir, the new album explores the vibrant mind of Darnell with a variety of themes and styles ranging from the lilting tropical love paean "Verily Verily Verily" to "Stony And Cory," echoing Darnell's early days with Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band. Mixed by Brennan Green (Chinatown Records, New York) and Lars Nissen (Denmark), the album features co-compositions and co-productions with Andy Butler of Hercules & Love Affair. The album will be preceded in July by the dream-like dancefloor winner, "I Do Believe," complete with mixes by Brennan Green, Faze Action, 40 Thieves and Emperor Machine.

 

Darnell first came to prominence during the mid-'70s in New York, forming Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band with his brother Stony Browder before producing a slew of eccentric projects for ZE Records including Cristina, Don Armando's Seventh Avenue Rumba Band and Gichy Dan, as well as sporting his trademark zoot suit and fedora for the first time for the debut recordings by Kid Creole & The Coconuts. Signing on to Chris Blackwell's Island Records and Seymour Stein's Sire imprint, Darnell would become one of the '80s' most unique and recognisable figures, scoring a brace of unforgettable chart hits mixing heavyweight tropical grooves with plenty of lyrical bite - "Stool Pigeon," "Annie, I'm Not Your Daddy," "I'm A Wonderful Thing Baby" and more.

For More Information, Check Out:

http://www.strut-records.com


May
31
2011

FROM THE KID TO HIS ITALIAN FAMILY

Dear Music Lovers,

To clear up an issue - I was contacted on Wednesday by an agent who asked me to join Bryan Ferry and others for a celebration in Milan. I was never told it was a political rally. I was told it was an outdoor event in the center of Milan that was free to the public. I have been involved in hundreds of such events in my life. But this one was a last-minute gig like no other: a Wednesday call for a Thursday show. I did not investigate the nature of the event. I never do. Perhaps I should start doing this in the future. My agent certainly did not inform me about the racial implications, that's for sure. The Cocos and I flew to Milan. We did 4 songs. We returned to our homes. Our performance was in no way an endorsement of any political party or ideology. We were not performing for a politician; we were performing for an audience. If we have inadvertently offended our fans we apologize for this faux pax. Had we been given more than a 24 hour notice we would have received warnings from our fans and this error in judgement could have been avoided.

 

Respectfully yours,

 

August Darnell

 

 


Feb
7
2011

Listen to August Darnell Interview on Red Bull Music Academy Radio

Sit in on the Fireside Chat with August Darnell on Red Bull Music Academy Radio



Feb
7
2011

Oct
5
2010

Kid Creole & The Coconuts to play Night of the Proms Germany 2010!

Check out the Kid Creole calendar for ticket and show information!

Watch NOTP Video Here!!

Germany: 12 cities
Friday 26 November 2010 | Köln | Lanxessarena
Saturday 27 November 2010 | Köln | Lanxessarena
Sunday 28 November 2010 | Oberhausen | Arena
Tuesday 30 November 2010 | Frankfurt | Festhalle
Wednesday 1 December 2010 | Frankfurt | Festhalle
Thursday 02 December 2010 | Erfurt | Messehalle
Friday 03 December 2010 | Berlin | 02 World
Saturday 04 December 2010 | Hamburg | 02 World
Sunday 05 December 2010 | Hamburg | 02 World
Tuesday 07 December 2010 | Mannheim | SAP Arena
Wednesday 08 December 2010 | Stuttgart | Schleyerhalle
Thursday 09 December 2010 | München | Olympiahalle
Friday 10 December 2010 | München | Olympiahalle
Saturday 11 December 2010 | München | Olympiahalle
Sunday 12 December 2010 | München | Olympiahalle
Tuesday 14 December 2010 | Bremen | Bremen Arena
Wednesday 15 December 2010 | Hannover | TUI Arena
Friday 17 December 2010 | Dortmund Westfalenhalle
Saturday 18 December 2010 | Dortmund Westfalenhalle

Sep
1
2010

Fantastic New Kid Creole Interview from EEN @ Pink Pop Classic 2010

Backstage interview and performance video with Kid Creole (August Darnell), Bongo Eddie and the Coconuts at Pink Pop Classic 2010.

Click here to watch the Kid Creole Interview @ Pink Pop Classic 2010


Interview and feature by Radio EEN - De Rode Loper

May
4
2010

London Times Review - Kid Creole & the Coconuts at the Barbican, London EC2

Kid Creole & the Coconuts at the Barbican, London EC2. By Clive Davis Four out of Five stars. Dumbing down? A certain number of eyebrows were raised when the Eighties pop star August Darnell, alias Kid Creole, was booked for the opening night of the La Linea festival of Latin music this year. After all, it is a long time since the Bronx singer’s zoot suits ruled the Top 40. Would it not have been better to let his fans cling to their memories of torrid nights on the dancefloor? Those of us who harboured such ungracious thoughts were soon put in our place by this hugely enjoyable and impeccably choreographed display of self-styled “mulatto music”. Darnell, who is now based in Sweden, turns 60 this year, yet his rapport with the latest lubricious crop of Coconuts is as captivating as ever. Sexual longing is in the air, yet there is still a winningly old-fashioned, look-but-don’t-touch quality to his battle of wits with the indefatigable trio of Aimee Bramall, Eva Tudor-Jones and Louise Peaple. Their vocals may not have been as impressive as their undulating movements — all performed with the knowingly blank expressions of go-go dancers — but the band and its three-man horn section made a gloriously full-blooded noise on such anthems such as Stool Pigeon and Endicott. As the evening progressed, Darnell and his crew gave us a history lesson in popular music, mixing Cab Calloway showmanship with Tito Puente percussion, James Brown footwork and Stax-era horn riffs. Apart from the moment when he invited a mass invasion of riotous female fans at the end, everything was superbly structured. Not a gesture was wasted as he paraded back and forth, exchanging hand slaps with all and sundry or casting longing glances at his singers. His musicians added some exuberant grace notes too. His long-time percussionist, the mischievous Bongo Eddie, turned into a convincing R&B vocalist on a juggernaut arrangement of Sweet Home Chicago. The trombonist Barnaby Dickinson plunged into a treatment of My Boy Lollipop that evoked the majestic playing of the Jamaican ska master Rico Rodriguez. Before the close, Darnell changed from Prince-like purple into an elegant white suit with matching fedora. The man still has style. A quarter of a century ago his act was sometimes dismissed as just an exercise in kitsch. Watching him again all these years later, his love of the traditions he absorbed in his youth is unmistakable. Full details of La Linea at comono.co.uk The performance took place on the evening of April 22, 2010.

May
4
2010

Kid Creole radio interview with Mark Jones on BBC 6 Music

The Kid Creole radio interview with Mark Jones goes out on BBC 6 Music on Monday 3rd May. It can be replayed on the BBC IPlayer for a week after that. ### 6 Mix – BACK TO THE PHUTURE With Mark Jones 3 Hour Bank Holiday Special celebrating Mutant Disco Also includes an interview with August Darnell and an exclusive mix from journalist, Wag club stalwart and Blue Rondo a la Turk frontman Chris Sullivan. Monday 3rd May 9.00pm-12.00midnight BBC 6 MUSIC Electronic music guru and Wall Of Sound label boss Mark Jones hosts a special bank holiday edition of his BACK TO THE PHUTURE radio show on BBC 6 Music, celebrating the Mutant Disco with special guest Kid Creole front man August Darnell. BACK TO THE PHUTURE began life last year as a series of shows on the station that linked the synth pioneers of the late 70's and 80's with today's new breed of electro-pop artists. The show has already helped bring together the likes of La Roux and Heaven 17 and Gary Numan and Little Boots for two special sessions at BBC Maida Vale studios, which generated a red button audience of 1.3 million viewers a record for a music link. Mark continues to explore the best in electronic pop old and new. In this Bank Holiday special Mark explores Mutant Disco - “ the Mutant sound is where all the sonics collided. Funk, Beats, Electro, Hip Hop, and just about everything else. Before these sounds if you couldn’t dance to funk, soul and disco you were lost on the edge of the dance floor wondering why, who and how things worked and trying to nod approvingly. Who? And how? Mutant Disco sounds opened the door to the floor……” Or in the words of Kid Creole “eat life or it will eat you! Music is love. Love is life. Devour it or suffer the consequences!” Back to the Phuture will also be appearing at numerous festivals this summer including hosting the opening night at Bestival on the 9th September with a line up that includes Heaven 17, Kids on Bridges, a La Roux DJ set, Blancmange and the hotly tipped new comers Villa Nah. www.backtothephuture.net

Dec
3
2009

The Kid's Still Got It! - Review of Kid Creole and the Coconuts @ Friars Club 27/11/09

The Kid's Still Got It! - Review of Kid Creole and the Coconuts @ Friars Club 27/11/09

 

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Not so very long ago, in a town not all that far away, I rock up outside Aylesbury Station to pick up my photographer. I've already been round the town twice to find the station, and predictably it will take another few laps of Aylesbury's town centre before we ditch the car in a multi-story and head off to find the LegendaryFriars Club.

First port of call is to get our passes and then find drink (long enduring day in the office.....and hell.....it's Friday!) 

We pass under large brick arches and round the side of a really quite impressive Victorian built mega hall to access the entrance to the Civic Centre. Already a throng of people are shuffling outside puffing on cigarettes or making their way through the tiny one person entranceway in-between overly enthusiastic door staff. Already at this vantage point in the queue, we can see a mass of middle-aged men and women, clearly ecstatic to be let out of the house. Dressed up to the nines in their best Matalan attire holding gingerly onto their plastic pint glasses like it was the first time. I predict that once we get our passes, we'll quickly retreat to the backstreets of Aylesbury for a traditional pint in one of those hard see through thingies.


Eventually we are at the front and we get directed over to a hole in the wall to receive our passes. An old couple of Gals are there before us and one is thanking the guy on the other side for such a wonderful invitation for such a special event on such a lovely night. Oh Jesus... They finally start to shuffle away from the window but our hopes are dashed when the particularly dotty one swings back to the window with the wrist band dangling from her frail fingers. "And what exactly is this for?" So after another few minutes of her and the staff fumbling over her decrepit snap-able wrists, she moves along and we get our passes.

We'll skip to our return to the venue as the pub visit wasn't all that. Not all that traditional, too loud, men with work boots eyeing up my entrance pass. (This might have been out of admiration, but I suspect they wanted to test out their footwear over our pretty non local, gig going, non Neanderthal faces.) 

So back inside we start to explore. Yes, we are just about the youngest people here. I see one couple with a spotty, curly haired youth wedged in-between them but apart form that...Nada. The bar and reception areas are nothing to write home about but the stage itself is quite impressive. Sports hall like, with very high ceiling and generous space to move. The balcony above (to which we have access) surrounds the top three sides with DJ and sound desks neatly arranged.

It's not long before the support band is called up on stage. China Crisis. The crowd seem genuinely excited so we mosey on down to the front. I can't say I've heard this band before. A name like that resonates in my head like some kind of Asian Punk Ska outfit! Sadly, this wasn't to be the case. A middle aged assortment of men pick there way on the stage to their chosen instruments, from here they look more like groupies doing sound tests. You couldn't mistake the lead singer however. Suited up and looking remarkably like Tony Hadley from Spandau Ballet, he flaunts his way up to the microphone and starts addressing the legion of fans before him. I instantly feel unnerved by this man on stage. The crowd seem to love him but with his constant flicking of the hair, facial quirks and (strangely) the touching of his face meant I almost can't look at him.

As you can probably guess, I won't be writing a hugely favourable review for China Crisis. Not only have I never heard of them or wished too, there style of music is seriously too old 'new wave' for my liking. As a whole, the band is tight and professional with even the creepy singer hitting the notes pitch perfect. It doesn't alter the fact though that I want to run for my life away from the aging rockers and the mums quite literally dancing round their handbags next to me.

For the remainder of their act, we escape to the upstairs balcony to sup beers and play with the camera.

Between acts, we step outside and grab an unsuspecting member of the public for an interview. I felt I needed a little more background of the atrocity which was China Crisis and also of the upcoming Kid Creoleperformance. We strike gold! Not only is this guy Johnny an extremely nice guy but is knowledgeable on both music and of Aylesbury in general. Far too much was said to be put into this meagre review, but least be said we were told about CC's admiring fan base and their rather successful 'support act' role for the last thirty years. Johnny wetted our appetites with his past experience of Kid Creole in Brighton and generally gave us a run down on the life of the Friars club and Aylesbury. Apparently the main reason for the 25 years gap of the Friars club not being open was due mainly to the outburst of violence between local skin head ruffians and their counterparts from Bedford back in the eighties. Hmmm - interesting. We left him to get ready for the Kid Creole crew but not before getting a diamond quote "Aylesbury's a small town, with big fowns and big showdowns...." - Nice!

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We enter the venue and make our way to the front. Although the crowd is the same as before, their definitely is a more laid back, jostling, party atmosphere in the room. The band enters the stage to the appreciation of the crowd. Drums, brass section and various others assemble on the stage including the almost infamous Bongo Benny with outrageous turquoise suit and oversized white golfing hat. The stage fills up with yet more musicians and the famous Coconuts - more about them later! Then finally the legendary Kid Creole enters the mix and boy - this man still has it. Dressed in natty long limbed pink suit and matching fedora, a quick address to the crowd and they kick off more or less straight away with Annie, I'm not your daddy! The crowd go nuts; this is what we've been waiting for all evening. Each band member kicked seamlessly into action with a wonderful mix of Caribbean percussion, big brass sounds and jacked up funky piano, guitar and most importantly vocals provided by The Kid and the Coconuts. The girls are just great. They are the perfect accompaniment to The Kid and just watching them leaves me out of breath. (No, not in that way.) They are just so incredibly energetic with perfect dance routines moving in and around the stage. (Mostly cavorting around The Kid) and yes, they are extremely easy on the eye. The songs keep coming and the atmosphere turns into more of a carnival as each minute passes by. The songs Stool PigeonGina Gina (my personal favourite...) and I'm a wonderful thing, baby all went off like a wicked big band tropical fun bomb and I doubt there were any unsatisfied punters in the venue that night. This is definitely a band that is best seen live. None of what I'd listened to before had prepared me for the pure funk genius which The Kid incorporates into this spectacular piece of showmanship. Every musician with solos and as a whole played to perfection including might I add, the lead guitarist who allegedly is the son of the late great Jimi Hendrix, but we are sure this is just a wild rumour.

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The band might have a line up utterly changed from their days playing here back 27 years ago, but I can more or less guarantee they sounded as if they'd never left us. It is a great accomplishment for the Kid to have stuck to his groove and maintain a band of such high calibre which still can rock any venue or audience. It's late, and we have a thousand roundabouts before we reach home (Milton Keynes). So we leave with a swing in our step, rhythmic melodies stirring the blood and lyrics still pounding our ears. I might even come back again, the venue's quite good. If the Friars Club can establish itself again as cultural music haven fit for the modern day, who knows?

Then again, I might have to leave it ten years and shave my head!

8/11

Review by Matthew Phillips (AKA Pilchid)

Photography by James Hough (AKA Mintyhit)


Dec
1
2009

Kid Creole Anthology Review from BabySue Magazine

Welcome and long overdue anthology featuring a wealth of material from Kid Creole and the Coconuts. We were fans early on...so we were as pleased as punch to receive this double disc overview in the mail. This collection is interesting because it features all new recordings of some of Kid's best known tunes...plus four previously unreleased songs. Quite a package here. You get two CDs featuring 20 tunes...housed in a triple fold cardboard sleeve with some intriguing liner notes. Hopefully this will reignite interest from Kid's original fans...and bring in legions more. This guy has paid his dues and deserves to be more widely recognized for consistently providing quality music for his fans. Killer tracks include "Young, Gifted, and White," "No Fish Today," "Don't Take My Coconuts," and "Yolanda." Top pick.

 

Read the full review at www.babysue.com


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